Everyman Liyana Arachchi’s Thoughts on the profound human qualities of the Tamil people

L. A. W. Liyanarachchi of Kadawatha, courtesy of the Daily News

The Mahinda Rajapaksa regime dispelled the differences which existed between the Sinhalese and the Tamils, established peace among all nations, and made ‘one nation’ out of the five communities and placed them as ‘Sri Lankans’. During the era our country was a colony of the British Empire, my father was one out of the few locals who were among the European rubber planters. He was at Hatbawe Group at Rambukkana.The workforce in this estate were Tamils of Indian origin who later became citizens like in every other estate in the country. Sinhalese, who lived in the bordering villages also were among them in small numbers, like today. Continue reading

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TNA visits South Africa and Sampandhan clarifies the Virtues thereof

Following the appointment of Mr Cyril Ramaposa by President Jacob Zuma as his Special Envoy for Sri Lanka, a delegation of the Tamil National Alliance led by its Leader Hon R Sampanthan visited South Africa from the 9th to the 12th of April 2014. The discussions held with the Special Envoy were very fruitful and we look forward to continued engagement with the Special Envoy especially during his impending visit to Sri Lanka.TNA -- 11  TNA   22 Continue reading

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Hambantota Port: An Occasional Traveller’s Benign View

Susiri Weerasekera

Just yesterday 20th April 2014, we visited the Hambantota harbor. Photo shows the rows of cars- metallic or white to be transshipped  due next day. Can count about 400 vehicles for reshipment. The other vehicles loosely parked further to the left are for the locals. DSC02489 Many hundreds of ships have come in so far transhipping. A ship can load or down load about 500 vehicles in half a day and leave. Some ships with up to 5000 thousand may need to remain around three days. There is a body of permanent driver staff that are kept busy off loading and loading vehicles on to the next ship. So far thousands of vehicles have been transhipped in over a couple of hundred or more ships. A far lesser number down loaded are for the local market, Colombo port being more central and economical for that. Continue reading

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Bygone times: Sujatha Singh meeting Harvey and Loxton in Canberra

Quintus de Zylwa

David Cruse and I were Kevin Rudd’s invited guests when he played host to the visiting Sri Lanka Cricket Team in Canberra. Sujatha Singh was India’s High Commissioner to Australia at the time and she is shown here with Neil Harvey and Sam Loxton along with Mr. Balapatabendi and a member of the Sri Lankan High Commission in Sydney.

SUJATHA SINGH Continue reading

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The ASEAN lines at the UNHCR sessions in Geneva and Chomksy’s Previous Warnings

Neville de Silva

As in the last few years, the recent anti-Sri Lanka resolution at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, has also been bisected and trisected yielding a multiplicity of opinions on who did what to whom and why. While triumphant cries might emanate from Washington, the prime mover of this resolution, and even shriller noises from London at what is seen as success in Geneva, more perceptive observers of US foreign policy are likely to take a far more tempered view of US influence in the world today, especially in some regions of the vast Asian continent over which Washington once held sway.

noamchomsky-11_zpsc34ece08Writing in London’s “Guardian” newspaper over two years ago, respected academic, philosopher and bête noir of many American administrations, Noam Chomsky drew attention to America’s waning global power in a two-part series titled “Losing the world: American decline in perspective.” The Chomsky contribution is mentioned here because he devotes much of the early part of the article to Washington’s declining power and influence in Asia, especially South East Asia, since America’s ignominious retreat from Vietnam after years of trampling on numerous international laws for which nobody at the top of the totem pole of power has been held accountable and punished. Continue reading

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“Facing the Taliban” by Anoja Wijeyesekera

Synopsis of Anoja Wijeyesekera’s FACING the TALIBAN

facing the talibanIt is the night of 11th September 2001. Anoja is frantically gathering her things. In the background, the falling bombs shake the foundations of the house, but her thoughts are far away. The scene is far from the ravaged Manhattan skyline. Anoja is one of the UN aid workers being evacuated from Kabul, Afghanistan. In the midst of the bombardment which was getting closer as the night wore on, she can only think of her brother, Srinath, who is himself trapped in the debris of the Twin Towers in New York. In a cruel twist of fate, two siblings find themselves as bystanders on opposite sides of what would soon become a cruel and painful conflict.

This dramatic opening to Anoja’s autobiographical account is just a small window into the fascinating and tumultuous tale of an aid-worker, mother and woman who finds herself in a place that would soon become a focal point of global politics. Continue reading

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Asanga Welikala’s grounded Appreciation of Ananda Chittambalam

Asanga Welikala, Courtesy of Groundviews.com

I was engaged in the thoroughly humdrum activity of marking some LL.B Honours dissertations early this Good Friday morning when I received an email from my old schoolmate, Sam Wickramasinghe, informing me of the death last night of Ananda Chittambalam. I am still shocked at the suddenness of his demise and terribly saddened by the news. But as Dryden said, ‘Death, itself, is nothing; but we fear /To be we know not what, we know not where’ and I take some small and inadequate solace in the fact that Ana’s end was swift. Continue reading

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Body Cavity Bombers: new modes of terrorist penetration

Body Cavity Bombers: The New Martyrs: A Terrorism Research Center Book 

body cavity . . authoritative account of a significant new terrorist tactic that is likely to become more pervasive in our increasingly sophisticated technological and medical age in which it is becoming easier for the terrorist adversary to use the types of body cavity bombs that will be capable of evading detection technologies Dr. Joshua Sinai, Washington, DC-based consultant on counterterrorism studies and author of Active Shooter: A Handbook on Prevention. “Body Cavity Bombers shows how what was once a lurid Hollywood fantasy has emerged as a legitimate threat, dissects the risk with clinical precision, and soberly considers the remediation options” Dr. Nils Gilman, Director of Research at Monitor 360 and co-editor of Deviant Globalization. “A timely and important book about a disgusting subject. In showing how the human body might be used to carry and conceal explosive devices, terrorism experts Bunker and Flaherty have left no stone unturned” Dr. Martin van Creveld, one of the world’s leading writers on military history and strategy, with a special interest in the future of war, and author of twenty books including The Transformation of War. “Those in the front line of identifying and taking necessary action to counter these new techniques of destruction would be well advised to read Dr. Bunker and Dr. Flaherty’s realistic assessment” Dr. Stephen Sloan, internationally recognized terrorism scholar and author/co-author of fourteen books on terrorism.

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Fashioning a Spectre of Disaster with Aid from Humanitarian Agencies: Tamil Marvels

Michael Roberts, courtesy of Groundviews, where the title differs and where readers will find critical comments

81 - displacement A scene showing displaced Tamils in makeshift encampments in late 2008(?) or early 2009 as they faced multiple displacements in step with LTTE demands

Summarising previous essays (see bibliography below) this article proceeds in point-form with an eye on greater impact via succinctness.

A. During the last phase of Eelam War IV in 2008/09 the LTTE attempted an international heist that is unprecedented in world history:[1] they used some 320,000 of their own people to manufacture a picture of an “impending humanitarian disaster” so that concerned international forces would intervene and impose a ceasefire or effect a rescue operation. These entrapped Tamil people were not only so many sandbags and a source of labour and/or conscripts. Their primary purpose was to constitute a spectre of impending horror. A2 – Thus, the LTTE political commissar Puleedevan told some friends in Europe “just as in Kosovo if enough civilians died … the world would be forced to step in” (quoted in Harrison 2012: 63) — a line of policy confirmed subsequently by KP, the head of the Tiger international arm, during a frank interview with the redoubtable Tamil journalist in Canada, Jeyaraj: “[we] had to magnify the humanitarian crisis,” (Jeyaraj, “KP” speaks out, 2011: 25, 30). A3 — This spectre was disseminated by (a) LTTE satellite technology at their HQ, and by TamilNet and the extensive Tiger networks abroad; and A4 — was fed by the reports of the Tamil medical men within the battle theatre acting as patriots[2]or under duress.

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A Sated Leopard in Sleepy Satisfaction at Kumana

Dushy Perera captures a rare treat

DSC03715  DSC03743 Continue reading

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